The Week that Was – October 12 to October 18

It’s been announced that Russia will be sending a delegation to the G20 in Brisbane, including President Vladimir Putin during talks while Joe Hockey was chairing a G20 Finance Minister’s meeting in Washington D.C.. Tony Abbott said that we had to accept their arrival but not embrace the Russians when they arrived and has also promised to talk with Putin about MH17. This nice promise of a discussion went down the drain however, when Abbott said this:

The comment led to confusion among the general population, as people struggled to define the term “shirtfront”. From what I can gather, it’s a shoulder charge in AFL – no longer allowed as they try to make the game safer – and the clips I’ve seen aren’t pretty, and in ABC Political Reporter Mark Simkin’s words: “hardly diplomatic”. It’s lead to a bit of a back-and-forth with the Russians, both at the Embassy and in Moscow, with Russian Embassy staff saying the Australia hasn’t even booked in a meeting with the Russians, and that Abbott shouldn’t be making the meeting physical anyway. The Russian PM, Dmitri Medvedev, has told Tony Abbott to behave, as have Australian politicians – namely Sarah Hanson-Young and Jacqui Lambie. Relations are believed to be at their lowest at the moment, but things are looking up after Julie Bishop met with Putin on the sidelines of a summit in Milan, where she asked Putin to use Russian influence to get the rebels to allow investigators back to the MH17 crash site, and found out that Putin is still coming to the G20.

The Australian Defence Force has been in the news a bit this week. Firstly, a group of veterans who were involved in humanitarian efforts during “Iraq 1” (The Gulf War), are wanting to have their deployment recognised as active service. The non-combat mission involved humanitarian aid to help Kurdish refugees, and involved 75 personnel, mainly medical staff and engineers. Many suffer mental anguish and a few have ended their lives, yet because their mission was not deemed to be active service, they don’t get their pension, a service medal or recognition of their mission. Many have said they would prefer the recognition over the pension, as the recognition proves that they did something a served their country.

Also this week, the Department of Defence has been in negotiations over pay increases for the armed forces. The government has offered a 1.5% increase every year for three years, but lose a day’s leave at Christmas. The main criticism is that the increased aren’t in line with inflation, and that the politicians deciding on their pay recently got a massive pay rise, and the defence force isn’t getting as big a pay rise. Bill Shorten has come out in support, saying the defence force should be paid more, and there have been many saying that more pay would mean more productivity.

A 300-page review into the nation’s education system has been released this week, with recommendations that Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island history and Australia’s place in the Asia-Pacific region should be taught as specific units and not just as a theme and a simplified curriculum – what that means is unclear, but it has something to do with the parents. Christopher Pyne has said that as far as he can tell, the review is not politically motivated. However, there has been controversy this week after the man in charge of the review into the English curriculum, Barry Spurr, has been stood down by the University of Sydney for sexist, racist and basically offensive emails. Spurr is well-known for focusing on Judeo-Christian literature, and essentially ignoring other authors in Australia. There are concerns that his views may have influenced the review and questions are being asked about who else in the review team who may have something to hide. Christopher Pyne has defended his role as Education Minister, saying that he didn’t pick Spurr and that he condemns offensive, racist and sexist comments like Spurr’s.

The Budget still isn’t through in its entirety, and this week concerns have been raised over the fuel excise and the way that the Greens reacted when they first heard about the plans. Originally, the Greens had believed that the government had seen the light when it was announced that the fuel excise would be raised, until they became aware that the money for the excise was going towards road building. There is disagreement over whether the government and the Greens had a chat, but regardless, the Greens had some turmoil within the party and the realisation that the government was going to build roads anyway. Mathias Cormann has also been criticised for calling Bill Shorten an “economic girlie man”, because he’s blocking Budget changes. Tanya Plibersek has said that that’s because the Labor Party sees the Budget as something pretty awful, and don’t want to pass it.

Australian states have bought isolation pods to transfer Ebola patients should any turn up in Australia, while Queensland Health has activated its Ebola medical teams. Each state has a specific hospital for treating Ebola, and they’re equipped pretty well, except for the isolation pods. There is still criticism of the government, who is refusing to send medical teams to Africa until they have a definitive evacuation plan, allowing for stops in countries along the route in order to refuel along the 30-hour flight. Oh, and the Defence Force doesn’t own a pod. Australia is also looking to the USA at the moment to see exactly what happened with the breakdown in protocol after two nurses who worked on the Liberian man who died in a Texas Hospital contracted the virus.

Finally this week, an Australian author who won a book prize is ashamed to be Australian because of the current government’s climate change policy, Australia has completed ‘successful’ airstrikes in Iraq, and a committee looking into the government’s terror legislation have said that the government can’t declare countries or regions no-go zones.

Tweets of the Week

The pro-democracy protests continue in Hong Kong

And the storm in Sydney at the start of this week led to entertaining news graphics

Things I’ve been Reading, Watching or Hearing

An ABC cameraman on his experience and how one can improve skills – ABC Backstory

A Blue Mountains school principal has received a Papal Medal for helping his students in last year’s bushfires – ABC News

University lecturers defend themselves against Sharri Markson’s article about their teaching – The Guardian

The Week That Was – May 11 to May 17

Well this week was fun. We got to talk about the Budget.

In the two days before the budget, we received some more information about what would be in it, like a pay freeze for MPs and their staff – which is essentially symbolic. Around 16000 public service jobs will go, 9 government agencies are to be either abolished or merged with others and the Mint, along with three other agencies are to be privatised. However, the media was saying on Monday and on Tuesday before the Budget, it would be a hard sell – with Tony Abbott saying they “will have a good story by the election” – I assume he means the 2016 election.

You can read what I wrote on the night here and here.

There was quite a lot of backlash from the public from this budget, with #ThreeWordBudget trending for at least the first 24 hours after the Budget and the Premiers of almost every state have responded negatively – to the point where they will hold an emergency meeting on Sunday.

It is believed that families, whether they be a single parent family, an elderly couple, or a family with three kids , could lose up to $3000, if not more. The ABC and SBS will have their funding cut, the ABC-run Australia Network will be shut down and the renewable energy sector is getting cuts too.

The catch at the moment is that Tony Abbott and the Coalition do not control the Senate at the moment – even after July 1 they won’t. The Palmer United Party (PUP) and the Greens have said they will not support the Budget through the Senate and there are people on social media encouraging the opposition parties (Labor, PUP, Greens, and the others) to block supply. Tony Abbott will now go on what ABC Political Reporter Mark Simkin called a “country-wide Budget roadshow”.

That roadshow though, will need to include universities if Abbott and his government want to convince everyone that this Budget is worth it. University students have been protesting the most in the last month about changes to university funding, with capped fees to end in 2016. The Group of 8 Universities support this change – at least the people running those universities do – but some teachers and students at these institutions, as well as other universities in Australia do not support it.

Speaking of university students, this video, from Friday shows Julie Bishop heading to an event at The University of Sydney, outside which students were protesting.

She seemed relatively ok with being yelled at and jostled as she was helped through the crowd by aides, but Christopher Pyne thinks the students were encouraged by the Labor party and should be charged with assault, and Tony Abbott called the students “revolting”. Yeah, that’s a fantastic way of trying to convince university students to accept your budget – and it’s ridiculous to think that the opposition encouraged a bunch of university students to protest, especially given that the way I understand it suggests that it was the same group that had been involved in the Q&A protests. Labor said that Pyne needed to grow up, that they didn’t have anything to do with the protest, and that the Coalition “didn’t inherit a budget crisis, they made it”. They also said that they condemn violent protest – but was it violent?

Back to Christopher Pyne though, because this week seems to be him saying or doing things he perhaps shouldn’t. He accused university students of assault, but earlier this week he called Manager of Opposition Business Tony Burke what many perceived to be the c-word…

…and he may also have been making signals to the Speaker of the House, Bronwyn Bishop, adding to talk about whether or not the Speaker is biased (she’s now hit 100 ejections from the House, all Opposition).

That’s all for this week – hopefully there will be less Budget next week.

Tweet of the Week

People applauding the ABC’s Budget coverage – well, the women involved in hosting and interviewing anyway…

https://twitter.com/AdamSpenceAU/status/466198538905350145

Things I’ve been Reading/Watching/Listening etc

The Budget Lock-up for Journalists

An interactive summary of the Budget’s “Winners and Losers” – ABC Online

Alan Kohler looks at the “budget of suicidal heroism” – The Business Spectator